학술논문

Fibrinogen Mitigates Prion-Mediated Platelet Activation and Neuronal Cell Toxicity
Document Type
article
Source
Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology, Vol 10 (2022)
Subject
platelet-derived extracellular vesicles
calpain activity
intracellular calcium
neuronal cell toxicity
mitochondrial membrane potential
fibrinolysis
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5
Language
English
ISSN
2296-634X
Abstract
Prion peptide (PrP) misfolds to infectious scrapie isoform, the β pleat-rich insoluble fibrils responsible for neurodegeneration and fatal conformational diseases in humans. The amino acid sequence 106–126 from prion proteins, PrP(106–126), is highly amyloidogenic and implicated in prion-induced pathologies. Here, we report a novel interaction between PrP(106–126) and the thrombogenic plasma protein fibrinogen that can lead to mitigation of prion-mediated pro-thrombotic responses in human platelets as well as significant decline in neuronal toxicity. Thus, prior exposure to fibrinogen-restrained PrP-induced rise in cytosolic calcium, calpain activation, and shedding of extracellular vesicles in platelets while it, too, averted cytotoxicity of neuronal cells triggered by prion peptide. Interestingly, PrP was found to accelerate fibrin-rich clot formation, which was resistant to plasmin-mediated fibrinolysis, consistent with enhanced thrombus stability provoked by PrP. We propose that PrP-fibrinogen interaction can be clinically exploited further for prevention and management of infectious prion related disorders. Small molecules or peptides mimicking PrP-binding sites on fibrinogen can potentially mitigate PrP-induced cellular toxicity while also preventing the negative impact of PrP on fibrin clot formation and lysis.